Still, 39 percent of people say they're likely to purchase Microsoft products in the future, while 83 percent of people viewed the brand positively a week after the incident, according to a poll of more than 2,000 adults from intelligence firm Morning Consult.

Twenty-four percent of people surveyed consider themselves "very concerned" over the "WannaCry" breach, but only nine percent say they are "much less likely" to purchase Microsoft products in the future.

Though the Redmond, Washington-based company's reputation remains largely unscathed by the incident, other companies haven't had the same luck. In March, Yahoo's favorability dropped 10 percentage points after it disclosed its third security breach.